New Tungsten Borides, Their Stability and Outstanding Mechanical

Jun 2, 2018 - The minimum tensile and shear stresses in the stress–strain curves are taken as the ideal tensile and shear strength. Figure 3...
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Surfaces, Interfaces, and Catalysis; Physical Properties of Nanomaterials and Materials

New Tungsten Borides, their Stability and Outstanding Mechanical Properties Alexander G. Kvashnin, Hayk A. Zakaryan, Changming Zhao, Yifeng Duan, Yulia A. Kvashnina, Congwei Xie, Huafeng Dong, and Artem R. Oganov J. Phys. Chem. Lett., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.8b01262 • Publication Date (Web): 02 Jun 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on June 2, 2018

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The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters

New Tungsten Borides, their Stability and Outstanding Mechanical Properties Alexander G. Kvashnin, 1,2,* Hayk A. Zakaryan, 3 Changming Zhao,4 Yifeng Duan,4 Yulia A. Kvashnina, 1,2 Congwei Xie 1,5, Huafeng Dong,6 Artem R. Oganov,1,2,5,* 1

Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology, Skolkovo Innovation Center 143026, 3 Nobel Street, Moscow, Russia

2

Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, 141700, 9 Institutsky lane, Dolgoprudny, Russia 3

4

Yerevan State University, 1 Alex Manoogian St., 0025, Yerevan, Armenia

School of Physics, China University of Mining and Technology, Xuzhou, Jiangsu 221116, China

5

International Center for Materials Discovery, Northwestern Polytechnical University, Xi'an, 710072, China

6

School of Physics and Optoelectronic Engineering, Guangdong University of Technology, Guangzhou, 510006, China

Corresponding Author *A.G. Kvashnin, E-mail: [email protected] *A.R. Oganov, E-mail: [email protected]

ABSTRACT. We predict new tungsten borides, some of which are promising hard materials that are expected to be stable in a wide range of conditions, according to the computed compositionACS Paragon Plus Environment

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temperature phase diagram. New boron-rich compound WB5 is predicted to be superhard with Vickers hardness of 45 GPa, to possess high fracture toughness of ~4 MPa·m0.5, and to be thermodynamically stable in a wide range of temperatures at ambient pressure. Temperature dependences of the mechanical properties of the boron-richest WB3 and WB5 phases were studied using quasiharmonic and anharmonic approximations. Our results suggest that WB5 remains a high-performance material even at very high temperatures.

Introduction Superhard materials are important for many applications. A material can be called as superhard if its Vickers hardness is higher than 40 GPa. 1–3 Well-known hard and superhard materials include carbon allotropes, 4–6 with the hardest possible material – diamond, then carbon nitrides, cubic boron nitride, boron allotropes and borides, nitrides and carbides of such transition metals as chromium, 7–9 rhenium, 10 molybdenum, 11,12 tungsten 13–18 etc. Some of these carbides (WC) and nitrides (TiN) are widely used in manufacturing and mining, e.g. in drilling equipment. There are five stable tungsten boride phases known from experiments: W2B 13,19, WB (including α and β phases) 19,20, WB2 21 and WB4 13,14,16. Numerous theoretical investigations of stability of new possible phases and their physical properties were published recently. 22,15,10,23 Wide ranges of homogeneity of W-B phases were mentioned in theoretical and experimental works, 13,24,18 and at least partly these may be caused by extensive polysomatism (for a discussion of polysomatism see Ref. 25). This leads to big difficulties for synthesis of stoichiometric single crystal phases. Quite often this leads to inaccurate crystallographic descriptions of synthesized phases by experimental methods, especially given the difficulties in locating positions of light boron atoms using X-ray diffraction. Due to this, the originally claimed W2B5 phase 19 was later identified as W2B4 with 6 / space group. 24,26 For a discussion, we refer to Ref. 18. Given these difficulties recently developed crystal structure prediction methods can provide invaluable help.

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The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters

Here we performed an evolutionary variable-composition search for new stable tungsten borides using the USPEX code. 27–29 All experimentally synthesized phases were found during the search, together with three new stable (Cm-W4B3, C2-W6B5, Pm-W4B7, Pmmn-WB5). Thermal stability at different temperatures was examined, Vickers hardness and fracture toughness were evaluated using recently developed models, and temperature-dependent elastic properties were studied for WB3 and WB5 – these are of special interest, being the hardest tungsten borides.

Computational details Stable phases in the W-B system were predicted using first-principles variable-composition evolutionary algorithm (EA) as implemented in the USPEX code. 27–29 For each promising composition, fixed-composition searches were carried out. Here, evolutionary searches were combined with structure relaxations and total energy calculations using density functional theory (DFT) 30,31

within

the

generalized

gradient

approximation

(Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof

functional), 32 and the projector augmented wave method 33,34 as implemented in the VASP 35–37 package. We used the plane–wave energy cutoff of 500 eV, Г-centered k-meshes of 2 ×

0.05 Å resolution for Brillouin zone sampling, ensuring excellent convergence of total energies. During structure search, the first generation (120 structures) was produced randomly with up to 16 atoms (variable-composition search) and 36 atoms (fixed-composition search) in the primitive unit cell, and succeeding generations were obtained by applying heredity (40%), softmutation (20%), transmutation (20%) operators, respectively, and 20% and 15% of each generation was produced using symmetry and topology random generators, respectively. For the predicted crystal structures, we performed high-quality calculations of their physical

properties. Crystal structures were relaxed until the maximum net force on atoms became less than 0.01 eV/Å. The Monkhorst–Pack scheme 38 was used to sample the Brillouin zone, using 10×10×10 (I4/m-W2B), 8×8×8 (Cm-W4B3), 8×8×8 (C2-W6B5), 8×8×8 (Cm-W8B7), 10×10×8

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(42 -WB), 10×10×4 (I41/amd-WB), 6×10×4 (Cmcm-WB), 10×6×4 (Pm-W4B7), 8×8×4

(3-WB2), 8×8×8 (62-WB3), 8×8×8 (6 /-WB4), 8×8×8 (Pmmn-WB5). The elastic tensor was calculated using the stress-strain relations:

 =

 , 

(1)

where σi is the ith component of the stress tensor, ηj is the jth component of the strain tensor. Equation (1) can be rewritten in terms of the Helmholtz free energy F as

1   = .   

(2)

We compute the Helmholtz free energy as:

!"# = $% !# +

'( !, "#,

(3)

where E0 is the total energy from the DFT calculations and Fvib is vibrational Helmholtz free energy calculated from the following relation in the quasiharmonic approximation: 39 '( !, "#

= )* " + ,-.!#/ ln 21 − exp 7−